About

Cecilia Laschi stands as one of the most influential pioneers in soft robotics, a field she has helped define, expand, and legitimize over the past two decades. Her research sits at the intersection of bioinspired design, compliant materials, and intelligent control, drawing extensively from nature — most notably the octopus — to reimagine what robots can be and do. Her 2013 paper "Soft Robotics: A Bioinspired Evolution in Robotics" has become a foundational text in the field, accumulating over 2,000 citations and helping crystallize soft robotics as a distinct and rigorous discipline. Laschi's octopus-inspired robotic arms, introduced as early as 2011 and 2012, demonstrated that robots built from flexible, muscle-like structures could achieve remarkable dexterity and adaptability in unstructured environments — capabilities rigid robots fundamentally cannot match. Her subsequent work expanded into biomedical applications, sensor integration using recurrent neural networks, and sophisticated control strategies for soft manipulators, collectively cited thousands of times. With a body of work spanning foundational theory, novel hardware, and advanced machine learning-based control, Laschi has shaped the intellectual backbone of modern soft robotics research worldwide.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

58
H-Index
323
Papers
19,540
Total Citations
60
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Soft robotics: a bioinspired evolution in robotics
2,042 citations · 2013
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2016 (27 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 579
🏛 Institutions: Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Piaggio (Italy), Center for Micro-BioRobotics, Google (United States), Italian Institute of Technology, National University of Singapore

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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